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by nazgu1 283 days ago
I would say they have direct control, as they have to bless app before even it can be published on other stores and can revoke this blessing anytime.
2 comments

So you never really own an Apple device.
You may own the device, but everything running on top of it is part of a service in control of Apple.

It would be great if vendors would be mandated to clearly separate communication about the product and the services on top, so they would have to compete again on actual product functionality, but so far it's not the case...

Unlocking/jailbreaking/installing your own software should be legal. I own the device, I should be able to do with it as I please without breaking cybersecurity laws. The issue is this covers IP/Platform Code and covers jailbreaking as that’s a form of reverse engineering in violation of the agreement you signed when you bought the device. It fucking sucks.
This seems more like a case of: you don't own other people's web servers.
No, more like you don’t own your OS. I definitely have physical ownership of their “server”.
No, you definitely don't own Apple's developer portal or any related infrastructure. If you did, then you wouldn't have anything to complain about, you could just fix it.

And of course you don't own iOS -- were you under any impression otherwise?

I don't really understand this culture of buyers remorse. If you don't buy FOSS, you don't get FOSS.

So you’re saying if I buy a computer, I don’t own that computer?

This is what it is. I own this device in my pocket. I should be able to install, tinker, take apart, said device - granted voiding its warranty - without a company bricking the device intentionally or removing software from the device simply because I chose a p2p network over a centralized one.

Stop defending this. Once you sell something, it’s sold. It’s no longer yours. You may have made it, you may support it, but it’s no longer yours.

You do own the physical device and you can do whatever you want with it. You can take it apart and tinker with it however you please.

If you don't like the software that they do or don't deliver to you over the internet, that is something entirely different.

Devil is in the detail